Water usage has been a hot topic in the AI data center world, but the numbers may surprise you.
According to the Manhattan Institute, data centers use 0.2 percent of daily water usage in the U.S. and that number has dramatically decreased in the past few years due to a new method: liquid cooling.
By moving to 45°C liquid cooling, AI factories in favorable climates can use dry coolers instead of conventional cooling-tower-based systems, cutting facility cooling water use from roughly 2.6M gallons per MW per year to near zero.
Liquid cooling enables AI factories to be both water and energy efficient, while creating opportunities for heat reuse and dispersal to local communities, allowing these factories to become energy grid assets.
Learn more below ⬇️
https://t.co/7WanoPNKTR
"Teslas are too expensive"
You can finance a Model Y RWD right now for the same price as a base Honda CR-V LX. No gas to pay for, plus the car can drive itself.
No immediate dilution—it's debt, not new shares. Conversion could dilute later, but the capped calls offset it up to at least a 125% premium, and ~$300M of proceeds funds buybacks (anti-dilutive).
Net: managed/limited dilution risk. Mildly bullish setup—raises cheap capital for flexibility while protecting shareholders. Standard positive structure for growth names.
$HOOD Robinhood also announced a 2b senior convertible notes raise (likely to be used to $2.2b).
I'll admit this one is puzzling.
The deal itself is straightforward: capped calls to reduce how much these might dilute, a portion used for accelerating buybacks, and the boilerplate language which essentially reads as "optionality."
This isn't done for solvency issues. Robinhood has no debt and a growing cash pile. If this is for a future acquisition, it's also unusual.
Most of their acquisitions have been smaller in scale and done with all cash. Additionally, senior convertible notes are usually not the most effective for an equity raise for acquisitions.
While I can't say I love this, it showcases the importance of leadership within an investment thesis. Robinhood has been incredibly disciplined with expenses and acquisitions, and at the end of the day, they're probably seeing something here that makes this compelling.
We’ve already seen this multiple times over the past few years where dogshit publications like @nytimes blames @tesla autopilot for a crash with ZERO evidence. The first liar headline they publish gets millions of views and their later retractaction is far less publicized. Shame on you. FSD does not drive like this. The truth will come out. RIP $TSLA
Here is real-time video of the Tesla crashing into the house in Texas a couple nights ago. The car was absolutely FLYING.
Again, Tesla's vehicle logs will show whether any system was turned on or not, but neither Autopilot nor FSD operates at speeds like this in residential areas. https://t.co/tHbOSLwWef
Shame on the @nytimes for wording this headline today to make it sound like it's already an established fact that Autopilot was on. There is literally zero evidence thus far that Autopilot was on.
Unexplored world on @geoguessr is fkn dope. We need to add these images to the whole world classic maps! (So it’s actually the whole world) especially for non moving players
US counties with and without interstate highway access
President Eisenhower reportedly designed the Interstate Highway System by placing a giraffe skin over a map and saying, "Follow the lines."
It doesn’t matter how many sensors a car has, what matters is its intelligence.
I’ve lost count of how many videos I’ve seen of Waymos being confused by Firetrucks during an emergency.